Author Archives: dougdraper

Ontario Government Introduces Legislation Against Bullying

By Doug Draper

 This is a good one from Ontario’s premier – strike a toughter than ever blow  against bullying!

Ontario Premier Dalton McGuinty

 The province’s premier, Dalton McGuinty, met with students in one of Ontario’s school today to send out a message that bullying and intolerance will be met with much tougher consequences than before against those doing the bullying.

 McGuinty also released a video, and Niagara At Large is providing a link to this video below, that reinforces his government’s intention to crack down on bullies.

 Most of this new bullying legislation, introduced by McGuinty’s Liberal government this November 30, focuses on bullies at elementary and secondary schools, including those who harass young people who are perceived to be or are gay. Those found guilty of harassing others at their school to a point that makes their lives hell may now be subject to expulsion from school under this legislation, and that is good. Continue reading

Welland NDP Urges Ontario Government To Fix Home Care For Seniors

 (Niagara At Large is posting the following media release from the office of Welland, Ontario Riding MPP Cindy Forster for your information.)

 Queen’s Park – Newly elected MPP Cindy Forster used her first question in the Ontario Legislature to tell the government local seniors deserve better home care services.

Welland Riding MPP Cindy Forster. File photo by Doug Draper

“The Niagara peninsula has one of the largest concentrations of seniors in Ontario and Canada. Yet, the services that these seniors need to stay healthy in their homes are hard to access and are inconsistent in the Niagara peninsula and across the province,” said Forster, the NDP member for a Welland Riding constituency that includes Welland, Port Colborne, Wainfleet and and the south end of St. Catharines.

 Yesterday, Port Colborne City Council unanimously passed a motion urging the provincial government to increase the funding for supportive home care for seniors. The council’s motion cited the cost effectiveness of home care, which often allows seniors to remain independent, and avoid costly hospitalisations. Continue reading

Niagara At Large Will Be Back!

A Note from NAL publisher Doug Draper

Yes, that’s right. Niagara At Large will be back in full swing beginning Monday, December  5. Not that we have completely gone away.

Old Sea Pines Inn - our getaway with good friends on Cape Cod. Photo by Doug Draper

For all of our many regular visitors to this independent news and commentary site, we’ve continued posting news, commentary and comments from readers over the past week, although we’ve not been as prolific as we often are in the amount of content that goes on this site. It is hard to do that while you are visiting friends at a nice inn called Old Sea Pines on Cape Cod or walking a beach along Cape Cod Bay.

Our favourite walking beach on Cape Cod Bay

We have just returned from the Cape and we’re shaking the sand out of our shoes and stoking the fires for the next week. As we all know, there are a good need of issues that need to be addressed in our greater Niagara region and Niagara At Large intends to address them with the same kind of insight and vigor that few other media venues in the area employ any more.

In the meantime, we would like to get a bit of feedback for you on the following. How would you feel about Niagara At Large featuring advertising on this site in the New Year? We are considering  featuring ads from locally owned, independent businesses only in order to raise some income to keep Niagara At Large alive. We also wish to ask you how you would feel if this site appealed to readers for donations to help sustain it. How do you feel  about site like this that asks for financial support from its readers?

Please share your views on these questions below and thank you for your past interest and support in this site. We are encouraged by your support and look forward to all future contributions from our readers, including news and commentary that we can post here.

 

Remembering George

By Doug Draper

 “Give me love, give my life, give me peace on earth.”

–         Lyrics by George Harrison

 For those of us who grew up on The Beatles, but even if we didn’t, he was one of the great ones. He was known to so many as the ‘the quiet one’.

George Harrison always had to work harder to  live up to the song writing wonders  of his mates, John Lennon and Paul McCartney, who  continue to go down  as one of the greatest song-writing teams of the past 50 years. And he did it!

Through such great songs as ‘Here Comes The Sun’, ‘Something’ and ‘As My Guitar Gently Weeps’, George put himself in the same regal company as anyone else who wrote songs that any of the greatest, from Frank Sinatra to any of the other greatest musicians from the [past half century would sing or play

George Harrison died 10 years ago this late November and for those of us who loved George Harrison’s music and the kindness for the world he stood for, this is a time to sit for a few moments and  remember. George was a person of peace.

 Bless you George and that great opening chord – some of us are still trying to figure it out – at the start of ‘A Hard Day’s Night’.

Niagara At Large will get back to local issues but post your view on this one below.

Sometimes You’ve Got To Put All The World Behind You

A Brief Comment by Doug Draper

This late November week, before joining more than 30 of my American friends for a traditional American Thanksgiving feast at a warm and wonderful Cape Cod inn called Old Sea Pines, I ventured out to the very tip of the Cape – about as far east as you can go in these parts before falling into the Atlantic Ocean.

It was here, on this fragile finger of sand dunes and evergreens curling out to sea , at a place called Race Point off  Provincetown,  that the legendary 19th century essayist Henry David Thoreau once said; “A man may stand there and put all America behind him.”

That’s what my wife and I decided to do for a precious few days, put all America, along with my native Niagara and Canada, behind us, and enjoy some time with friends, walking a beach, sitting near the fireplace with a book about all the famous authors and actors who lived here, and strumming a few tunes on the guitar. Continue reading

How About Occupying Christmas?

A Commentary by Doug Draper

 Okay, so we’ve had Occupy Buffalo and Occupy Toronto and all the other occupations in cities and towns across the continent to draw attention to the greed of a few and the declining fortunes of the rest of us who make up the 99%. Now wher does the Occupy movement go next?

The kind of encampment the 1% likes. Bet they won't pepper spray this one.

How about Occupy Christmas?

 You don’t have to spend cold nights sleeping in a tent to Occupy Christmas and you don’t have to worry about being evicted and pepper sprayed. We can Occupy Christmas by spending the next four weeks up to and including Boxing Day not purchasing a single item from big box, corporate-owned stores. We can make a Yuletide pledge to make all of our purchases at locally-owned, independent shops instead. Continue reading

What’s Wrong With Saying Merry Christmas?

  By Dan Wilson

 It seems that as soon as the snow starts to fly this question rears its ugly head. But it’s usually the “other side” that raises it, offended that some people are offended by such an “innocuous” salutation. So I’m going to take a stab at explaining it, being one of those who does take offense to it.

 The simple answer is this: there’s absolutely nothing wrong with saying Merry Christmas to someone else. That is of course, if you’re saying it to someone who has the same beliefs as you do, such as a family member, close friend or someone you know from church.

 However, if the recipient, let’s say a total stranger you encounter on the street or at the shopping mall, has a “problem” with Christmas, Christianity in general or is affiliated with a different religion (or rejects religion altogether), there might be some friction. Continue reading

Ontario Throne Speech Shows Some Commitment To Great Lakes Protection

(Niagara At Large is pleased to post the following media release from the Ottawa-based citizens group, the Council of Canadians, for our readers to review and comment on.)

In the Ontario government’s (November 22) Throne Speech, it stated, “Your government also knows that Ontario’s wealth is not just economic — it is found in our abundance of natural beauty and resources, and we all have a duty to protect it. That’s why your government will follow through on its goal to become the continent’s water innovation leader by 2015 and work with environmental experts and community groups to develop and introduce a Great Lakes Protection Act.”An image of Great Lakes from the Canadian film documentary Waterlife.

The Council of Canadians welcomes the commitment to the Great Lakes noted in yesterday’s Throne Speech. We believe that the Great Lakes must be recognized as a commons, public trust and protected bio-region. We intend to work with the Ontario Legislature to ensure that these critical principles are reflected in the new Great Lakes Protection Act. Continue reading

Dalton McGuinty’s Voluntary Wage Freeze Failed Everyone But His Union Pals

(Niagara At Large is posting the following November 24 media release from the Ontario Conservative Party for your information.)

NEWS:

QUEEN’S PARK — Ontario PC Leader Tim Hudak said Dalton McGuinty’s voluntary wage freeze has failed everyone except the union bosses that helped him get re-elected. Hudak renewed his call for a mandatory, legislated wage freeze that will save the government up to $2 billion over just two years.

Ontario Conservative leader Tim Hudak

Dalton McGuinty implemented a two-year voluntary wage freeze for public sector workers in March 2010. While the government’s 300,000 non-unionized workers had no choice but to comply, arbitrators and the union bosses representing 700,000 unionized workers have thumbed their noses at the wage freeze – continuing to accept pay raises and bonuses. Since the voluntary freeze was put in place, thousands of non-unionized workers have joined unions to circumvent Dalton McGuinty’s failed wage freeze. Continue reading

Inquest In To Niagara, Ontario Teen’s Death Adjourned Again

By Doug Draper

 A chief Ontario coroner’s inquest into the circumstances surrounding the death of Fort Erie teen Reilly Anzovino has been adjourned again, and that is a good thing.

Reilly Anzovino

 Anything less than an agreement to adjourn the inquest this past Monday, November 21 until a new lawyer for the Anzovino family has an opportunity to properly prepare would have been a miscarriage of justice for the family and for a wider community seeking answers for this tragedy.

 Dr. Jack Stanborough, the presiding coroner, ruled in favour of the adjournment after hearing statements from Maureen Currie, the new lawyer the family has retained, and from Reilly’s father, Tim Anzovino, asking for at least two more weeks to review the volumes of information that have accumulated following the 18-year old’s death in the early hours of December 27, 2009. Continue reading

A Winter Wonderland in Niagara Parks

(Niagara At Large is pleased to post the following media release from the Niagara Parks Commission about holiday season events around the Falls for your information.)

 NIAGARA FALLS, ON. — Spend this holiday season walking through a real Winter Wonderland at Niagara Parks.

Carousel near Falls is a slice of Niagara Parks' Winter Wonderland festivities. Photo courtesy of Niagara Parks Commission.

The Winter Festival of Lights is already well known for adding a twinkle to Niagara Falls in the winter, and The Niagara Parks Commission (NPC) is adding new and exciting attractions to the traditional lighting displays.

 The centerpiece of this winter showcase will be the Victorian Candy Land at Queen Victoria Place with its vintage winter carousel overlooking the Falls, placed amid a glistening display of seasonal décor prepared by the Niagara Parks garden design team. Families will also have a chance to make their own s’mores over an open fire. Continue reading

City Of Buffalo Allows Occupiers To Stay Put

A Brief news Commentary from Doug Draper

 While other cities –New York, Vancouver and Toronto included – move to clear out encampments of Occupy movement in their parks – reports from Buffalo so far say that the city’s mayor has no plans to evict the Occupiers there.

Visit Occupy Buffalo at http://www.occupy buffalo.org

 

 Niagara At Large paid a brief visit earlier this November to the encampment located on Washington Square in  front of Buffalo’s towering city hall and Occupiers said at the time that the city was openly expressing its respect for their right to demonstrate for economic justice for the 99 %.

 In return, Buffalo Mayor Byron Brown told local media recently there are no plans to remove the Occupiers because, according to one PBS-WNED report, “they have been respectful and are keeping the square in front of city hall clean.” Continue reading

Evictions Only Make Occupy Movement Grow Stronger

  By Mark Taliano and Tori Crispo

 This past weekend’s  2,000 strong  ‘Evict Rob Ford March’ – a response to Mayor Ford’s efforts to evict the occupiers from St. James Park in Toronto, Ontario – emphasized the  strength of the Occupy movement. It also emphasized the weakness of current government policies as they relate to the 99 %. 

Photo courtest of Mark Taliano

 The corporate friendly City of Toronto is about to reduce subsidized housing for the poor, close youth hostels,  close libraries, and weaken social services at a time of need, when they should be doing the exact opposite.  If the “tent city” at St. James Park is forced to de-occupy, many ofToronto’s most fragile citizens will lose yet another support system, and they will be forced to rely on the cold political austerity of a city that is treating them as less than worthy people. Continue reading

Hudak And Horwath On The Wrong Path

By Angela Bischoff, Ontario Clean Air Alliance

Despite the fact that Ontario has a $16 billion deficit, Conservative Opposition Leader Tim Hudak and NDP Leader Andrea Horwath are asking Premier McGuinty to increase the province’s deficit by $350 million by removing the HST from home heating bills.

Angela Bischoff, Ontario Clean Air Alliance

While we recognize that some Ontarians are struggling to pay their heating bills, the opposition’s proposed solution is fiscally and environmentally irresponsible.  Fortunately, there is a better solution: invest in energy conservation and efficiency.

By investing in energy efficiency we can create jobs in Ontario right now and permanently reduce our home heating bills while reducing the outflow of Ontario dollars to Alberta to purchase natural gas.

The main barrier to home energy retrofits is their high up-front capital cost.  However, Ontario’s electric and natural gas utilities (e.g., Toronto Hydro, London Hydro, Hydro One, North Bay Hydro, Enbridge and Union Gas) can eliminate this barrier by:

·    Providing financial incentives and low interest, on-bill financing for home energy retrofits; and
·    Establishing rental programs for high-efficiency water heaters and furnaces, thermal storage units (for those with electric heating), and solar and geothermal heating systems.

Please email Tim Hudak and Andrea Horwath ( cc me ) and ask them to advocate for energy solutions that will lower our energy bills, create jobs and reduce greenhouse gas emissions while not increasing the provincial deficit.

P.S. For more info, see our report An Energy Efficiency Strategy for Ontario’s Homes, Buildings and Industries

Angela Bischoff is the outreach director of the Toronto-based citizens group, Ontario Clean Air Alliance.

(Niagara At Large invites you to share your views on this post below.)

Region Reject’s Welland’s Call For By-Election To Fill Council Seat

By Willy Noiles

Niagara’s regional council, for the first time in its 41-year history, has rejected advice it sought from a local municipality on how to fill a vacant council seat.

Cindy Forster is now the Welland Riding's MPP. Municpal leaders are still struggling over how to fill her vacant seat at regional council.

In this case, the municipality was Welland and the seat was the one vacated by Cindy Forster, who won the the Welland Riding in last month’s provincial election. Forster, along with George Marshall, won the city’s two regional seats in last year’s municipal elections. Former Welland mayor Damian Goulborne finished third in the race.

When Forster’s seat was declared vacant Oct. 27, Regional council asked for Welland’s recommendation on how to fill the seat at the Region. Welland’s council began with a motion to appoint Goulborne, but that motion was defeated by one vote. City councillors then voted seven to six to hold a by-election at an estimated cost to the region of $100,000.

At this Thursday’s (November 17) regional council meeting, many councillors there raised the cost of a by-election as their reason for voting against Welland’s recommendation. The money would have come from the projected $1.2 million unaccounted for surplus from the 2011 budget. Continue reading

We Must Stop Another Niagara River Toxics Crisis

By Maude Barlow and Wenonah Hauter

(An Niagara At Large note – The following article, written by Council of Canadians head Maude Barlow and Wenonah Hauter, director of the United Nation’s Food& Water Watch, appeared in The Buffalo News this November 13. A warning on what could be a serious threat the Niagara River and Lake Ontario – a source of drinking water for millions of Ontario and New York residents – NAL posts with the permission of the Ottawa-based citizens group, Council of Canadians.)

Niagara Falls isn’t just a place where newlyweds go to snap pictures.

Council of Canadians head Maude Barlow. Photo courtest of Council of Canadians.

It’s an international treasure that feeds into Lake Ontario and provides drinking water to Toronto and beyond. And now, its future is in the hands of Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo and the New York State Department of Environmental Conservation, both of which are pushing hydraulic fracturing (fracking) in the state, as well as the Niagara Falls Water Board, which will soon decide whether or not to accept toxic fracking waste trucked in from around the state. Get ready Niagara — you’re about to get fracked.

Many Americans are familiar with the disaster at Love Canal and the ensuing demand for stronger environmental regulation after a corporation buried massive amounts of toxic chemicals around Niagara Falls — chemicals that saddled thousands of residents with chronic health problems ranging from birth defects to cancer. Now the oil and gas industry wants to send its toxic waste to the city’s wastewater treatment plant, which discharges into the Niagara River, into Niagara Falls and eventually into Lake Ontario. Continue reading

Speak Out For Our Great Lakes Waters!

A Brief Commentary by Doug Draper

Late this October a lone town councillor in Niagara-on-the-Lake, Ontario named Jamie King tabled a resolution that should be heeded by everyone whose health and welfare depend on the quality of water we draw from our Great Lakes for drinking and other purposes.

It was a resolution that called on r government leaders on both sides of the Canada/U.S. border – municipal, provincial, state and federal – to investigate a plan to take the chemically contaminated waters from hydraulic fracturing (also known as fracking) operations in the northeastern United States and discharge it to the Niagara River near the world-renown Horseshoe and American Falls through a municipal wastewater treatment plant in Niagara Falls, New York. Continue reading

Private Member Bill Aims To Strip HST From Home Heating Bills

By Doug Draper

When the Ontario New Democrats table a private members bill in the weeks ahead, calling for the removal of Harmonized Sales Tax from home heating bills, a Niagara member of the governing Liberal Party says he will support it.

Niagara Falls MPP Kim Craitor

Niagara Falls MPP Kim Craitor, who has a reputation as a bit of a political maverick in his governing party, told Niagara At Large this November 15 that when the provincial legislature reconvenes in the days ahead,, he will vote in favour of taking the HST off home heating.

“I certainly believe the HST (a combination of the federal GST and provincial sales tax or PST) should be taken off,” said Craitor, who said he believed home heating should have been exempted by the provincial and federal governments when it was introduced in Ontario two summers ago. I believe it should be taken off for home heating right across the country,” he added. “It is an essential service. Continue reading

An Award In Nursing Leadership? What About The Stressed-Out Nurses?

A Commentary by Doug Draper

As if the antics of the Niagara Health System over the past decade haven’t already put our heads through, here is another mental twister for you.

Niagara Health System interum CEO Sue Matthews is lavished by Ontario Hospital Associaion with 'excellence' award for nursing leadership.

Try to wrap a rational mind around this. A mere two days after a public survey was released this November 9, confirming that a broad cross section of Niagara residents have little or no trust or confidence in the way the NHS is running a majority of the hospital services in this region, we learn that the NHS’s interim president and CEO Sue Matthews was off to Toronto to receive an “Award of Excellence in Nursing Leadership.” That same day – December 11, Lorretta Tirabassi-Olinski, president of Ontario Nurses Association Local 26 representing nurses working for the NHS, released an open letter charging that, in the ONA local’s view, a “crisis situation” has been reached as far as workload and staffing at NHS hospital sites.

“No one at the Niagara Health System can say they have been unaware of the issues related to poor staffing, the inability for staff to get a day off work even to attend education sessions and subsequently less than adequate resources available to provide optimal care to their patients,” said Tirabassi-Olinski in her letter.

“Nurses are often called at home several times a day on their days off to come in and work overtime shifts so that their peers get some relief, knowing that their peers will come in for them when they too need extra staff to help with the demand to provide optimal patient care. Often times they are still faced with poor staffing, inadequate resources and support services that close up shop at 4 p.m. Monday to Friday.” Continue reading

Occupier Encampment Continues To Stand For Social Justice

By Mark Taliano and Tori Crispo

Pulitzer Prize winning author Chris Hedges, in Death Of The Liberal Class, says “to live in the fullest sense of the word, to exist as free and independent human beings means to defy injustice.”

The occupier encampment hanging in there in Toronto. Photo courtesy of Mark Taliano.

Occupiers at St. James Park, Toronto, and the growing number of people who support the Occupiers Movement, are productively and peacefully fighting societal injustices, and for this, they should be proud.

They should be thanked, as well!

One glaring injustice is media coverage. Much of the media suggests that the park is attracting the homeless. Yes, say the Occupiers, this is true, but what isn’t mentioned is that the park and its adjoining Anglican church has always been a refuge for the homeless. The church has always had a “Good Food Box” program to feed the needy. A box would cost about $3.00 and the food would help sustain them. Currently, the Occupy people are preparing and serving about 1,000 meals a day.  As Reverend Stoute from the church explains; “You’re downtown. There’s going to be people who are fragile. That’s not a product of the Occupy protest. That’s a product of living in the city.” Continue reading

It Is Time For Divorce From NHS

By Pat Scholfield

(NAL editor’s note – There has long been a feeling among many south Niagara residents that the Niagara Health System was treating them like second-class citizens. The biggest slap for many came when the NHS moved forward with the building of the super hospital complex in west St. Catharines rather than in a more central location in the region. Pat Scholfield was one of those whose call for a central hospital complex went unheeded by former NHS CEO Debbie Sevenpifer and company.)

When Dr. Jack Kitts reviewed the Niagara Health System’s HIP (hospital improvement study) in 2008 he said, “The NHS has little public support.” Support was so bad he questioned whether the NHS would be able to implement the HIP. He recommended an Advisor.

A HIP Advisory Forum was established January 2009 to allow the NHS to better communicate with community partners and to allow them an opportunity to provide input as the HIP is implemented.

Niagara hospital care advocate Pat Scholfield

 Since 2009 parts of the HIP have been implemented including removal of inpatient acute and emergency services in Fort Erie and Port Colborne and drastic cuts to beds and frontline staff across Niagara .

Trust in the NHS eroded further.

A PR firm was hired to conduct an NHS trust survey. Dr. Terry Flynn, who led the survey, said, “I’ve never seen reputation scores this low”, when reporting the results of his report this November 9. He stated the NHS reputation scores were the worst he has ever seen. Continue reading

A A Call For Artwork For North America’s Largest Garden Tour

(Niagara at Large is pleased to post the following from the organizers of Garden Walk Buffalo in the great border city of Buffalo, New York.)

Garden Walk Buffalo is looking for submissions of original artwork for use on the Garden Walk 2012 posters, t-shirts and maps. Artwork must be garden-related and should relate to the type of gardens, flowers, and neighborhoods found on Garden Walk Buffalo in late July. This is an excellent opportunity to feature your work to hundreds of local gardeners as well as thousands of visitors.

Garden Walk Poster Art from summers gone by. Courtesy of Garden Walk Buffalo.

Submission tips:
·    Keep Artwork Simple – it needs to reproduce well on a variety of materials. Do not put any type over the design.
·    Try not to use colors or flowers similar to recent artwork used by the GW
·    Artwork should be considered “wearable and salable” for both men and women

Entries are due: Tuesday, January 31, 2012 Continue reading

Statement by Ontario PC Leader Tim Hudak, MPP on Remembrance Day

(This Remembrance Day note from Ontario Conservative leader Tim Hudak – the only one Niagara At Large received from one of the province’s three main party leaders – is worth a read. NAL is posting it for your information.)

November 11, 2011

Remembrance Day marks the solemn occasion when Canadians gather to honour and pay tribute to those who fought and died for our freedom, and the liberation of millions around the world.

Grave of Canadian WW1 soldier John McCrae, author of the poem 'In Flanders Fields'.

On behalf of Her Majesty’s Loyal Opposition and the Ontario PC Caucus, I express our deepest gratitude to all the men and women in our Armed Forces.
To those who gave their lives in service of Canada and our values, we remember your sacrifice and cherish the country you made possible.

From Vimy to Dieppe, Korea to Bosnia, Rwanda to Kandahar, their sacrifice for Canada is something we must never take for granted. The debt we owe is insurmountable.

The bombers shot down over German territory, the carnage that took place in the trenches, the IEDs that have taken so many lives in Kandahar province, it his hard to fathom a moment in their boots. Continue reading

Survey Confirms NHS’s Reputation Is In The Tank

By Doug Draper

The trust and satisfaction members of public feel for the Niagara Health System – the body responsible for managing a majority of the hospital services in Niagara, Ontario – is extremely low, says Terry Flynn, a McMaster University researcher who has a long background in doing public surveys on organizations.

Terry Flynn outlines survey results. Photo by Doug Draper

In all of his more than 30 years in the field, Flynn told a media conference in Niagara, Ontario this November 9 that in all of his more than 30 years in conducting public opinion studies on organizations, “I have never seen reputation scores this low. Even Toyota, in the heat of their controversy (a few years ago over faulty gas and break peddles), did not have a reputation score this low.”

“The message is that the reputation of the NHS is damaged and the relationship they have (with the public) is fractured,” added Flynn following exhaustive surveys he and his team conducted this summer and fall through phone interviews, questionnaires and more in-depth one-on-one interviews with more than 4,000 Niagara residents, including NHS employees. Continue reading

Remembrance Day/Veterans Day Should Always Be A Day Of Sad Reflection

A Brief Comment by Doug Draper

“I want to know who the men in the shadows are. I want to hear somebody asking them why – they can be counted on to tell us you our enemies are, but they’re never around to fight or to die.”
–    from the Jackson Browne song ‘Lives in the Balance.

Through most of human history, it seems, there have always been men in the balance orchestrating one war after another. In every case, countless lives have been destroyed and where has it all gotten us as a species on this planet?

The First World War memorial in Welland, Ontario's Chippawa Park.

For the first time in my adult life, I bought a poppy last week off some nice friendly fellow who belongs to one of our local Legion halls but was not a World War II veteran. There are fewer and fewer Second World War veterans around and that, too, is sad because there is a great deal we can learn from their horrific experiences of war.

In my years as a journalist, I’ve interviewed many of these Second World War veterans for Remembrance Day articles and I was always impressed by their modesty. They did not ask or expect to be treated like someone special or a hero. They were more often interested in talking about the tragedy of war and how, in their view, war is represents the ultimate failure of our species to resolve our conflicts in more civilized ways. Continue reading

Don’t Shop When You Can Swap

A Post from the Niagara branch of the Ontario Public Interest Research Group

The Ontario Public Interest Research Group ( OPIRG) is a student funded and student directed socially just environmental organization. In preparation for the holiday season OPIRG has decided to hold a Clothing Swap Party as a way to address rampant consumerism and it’s environmental consequences.

OPIRG's INfoShop in St. Catharines, Ontario.

OPIRG is urging the Niagara Region to consume “smarter” by moving away from the outdated concept of outright ownership – and the lust to own – towards one where we share, barter, rent and swap.

All are welcome to come! Critical mass is important for collaborative consumption. If there aren’t enough people “out there” offering or demanding these goods and services, then these systems quickly wither.

November 23rd at 7 p.m. in the OPIRG InfoShop at 21 King St, St. Catharines, Ontario is the perfect opportunity for you to clean out your closet, wardrobe, attic , whatever, and swap things that you might actually wear/use! Continue reading

Coroner’s Inquest Halted While Anzovino Family Seeks New Lawyer

By Doug Draper

An Ontario coroner’s inquest into circumstances surrounding the death of Fort Erie teen Reilly Anzovino, has been adjourned while the Anzovino family finds another lawyer.

Denise Kennedy and Tim Anzovino, left, are no longer being represented at coroner's inquest by lawyer Wayne Redekop, at right. File photo by Doug Draper.

In a statement read at the inquest this November 7, Reilly’s parents Tim Anzovino and Denise Kennedy, informed the presiding coroner, Dr. Jack Stanborough, that they cannot proceed with Wayne Redekop as the attorney representing them at a hearing that commented in a Welland courtroom on October 31 and is expected to run another two to three weeks. Continue reading

Niagara, Ontario Regional Police Service’s Proposed Budget Hike Is Lowest In Years

By Willy Noiles

Regional councillors got their first look at the Niagara Regional Police Service’s proposed 2012 budget last Thursday at a budget committee of the whole meeting. Deputy Chief Joe Matthews called the proposed budget both “efficient” and “effective.”

Deputy Chief Joe Matthews presented the budget, which managed to fall within the target set by the Region. The force’s proposed operating budget represents a 3.93 per cent increase over 2011.

The $126.9 million plan includes debt charges that were consolidated and removed from the operating budgets of regional departments and interim facilities costs that were included in the budget instead of being funded from regional reserves. When those factors are removed, Matthews explained, the force’s increase is 2.28 per cent or $2.78 million. The Region had asked the force to hold its increase at $2.8 million, Matthews added. Continue reading

NHS Supervisor Is Leading Us Through The Looking Glass – Again!

A Commentary by Doug Draper

Once again we in Niagara, Ontario are being treated to another episode in the ‘Alice in Wonderland’ world of a Niagara Health System that has made a mess of our regional hospital services for most of the last 10 year.

NHS supervisor Kevin Smith

This time we are invited to stumble through the looking glass courtesy of a “letter to the editor,” sent to mainstream media in Niagara over the first few days of November. The letter comes to us, courtesy of Kevin Smith, the CEO for St. Joseph’s Hospital in Hamilton that McGuinty and company parachuted in to our region a few months back to spin a bit of yarn in the hope of lulling us in to a sense of confidence that concerns over our hospital services will be addressed.

In the letter,  Smith stresses that assertions by others in the Niagara community that he, as a supervisor brought in by the McGuinty government to review hospital services here, is “unwilling to review data and recommend program alignment in the “HIP” (Niagara Health system’s Hospital Improvement Plan) are not correct. “Nothing could be further from the truth,” he says. Continue reading

Occupy Buffalo Still Going Strong

By Doug Draper

While the grand poobahs of various cities across Canada, including Toronto, Halifax , Vancouver and Victoria, are in the process of clearing ‘Occupy Movement’ protestors out of their parks, the Occupy Buffalo wing of the movement still seems to be going strong.

Occupy Buffalo with city hall looming in background.

During a short visit this November 5 to the encampment for Occupy Buffalo, located on Niagara Square in front of Buffalo, New York’s majestic city hall, this Niagara At Large reporter was told by some of the protesters that things are still going fine with the city.

“Our relationship with the city has been good,” said one of the protesters as the colony of tents here goes into its second month. This encampment that appears to have gone out of its way to keep the area clean and free of drugs or alcohol was also continuing to enjoy a good deal of support from drivers and passengers, honking horns and sharing waves of support as they passed by. Continue reading

Can Niagara Do More To Combat Climate Change?

Niagara At Large is posting the following media release from the not-for-profit citizens group Climate Action Niagara for your information. The release invites you to attend presentations and an open discussion at 7 p.m. this November 7 at 111 Church St. in St. Catharines on what communities across Niagara can do to respond to the global challenges of climate change, weakened economies and diminishing supplies of cheap energy.

Transition Towns are coming to Niagara! – How might our response to peak oil and climate change look more like a party than a protest march?

The fourth workshop of the SUSTAINABILITY SERIES, (eco films and speaker panels, and excursions) Climate Action Niagara is pleased to host representatives from Transition Toronto, Transition Guelph and Transition Oakville.

Niagara’s own Anthony Barrett, Daniel Bida, Sally Ludwig and Chris Mills will share the successes and challenges of Ontario communities and the many manifestations of the model of Transition Towns, followed by an open discussion on opportunities for Niagara.  Continue reading

Niagara Regional Councilllor Calls For ‘Emergency Meeting’ And Possible Funding To Draw Jobs Here

By Doug Draper

St. Catharines regional councillor Andy Petrowski, in an open letter to Niagara, Ontario’s regional chair, Gary Burroughs, is calling for an emergency meeting to discuss how Niagara can find a way of winning up to 340 jobs that may be brought here by GreenSafe Demanufacturing Inc., a company that apparently has a successful track record of recycling old stoves, dishwashers and other large household appliances of their kind in t east coast facilities in Canada.

St. Catharines regional councillor Andy Petrowski

Petrowski, a new regional councillor who has already made it clear he doesn’t mind shaking things up at council, told Niagara At Large he would rather see economic development personnel at the regional government level working to attract a company like GreenSafe here but, in his view, where are they?

Burroughs told Niagara At Large during an interview this November 4 that as much as he agrees with Petrowski that he wants to see a company like GreenSafe set up shop and generate jobs here, it is not really a municipalities place to make up for any part up to the $10 million the company asked Ontario’s government (which has so far said no) to set up shop here. Continue reading

Listen Up, Niagara, Ontario. Being Named Canada’s ‘Cultural Capital’ Comes With Some Responsibility

By Pamela Minns

Culture defined to its fullest is  arts, culture and heritage.

Although they are connected, heritage is not always mentioned in the same breath as culture !

Brock Monument and the bicentennial of the War of 1812 had a lot to do with Niagara's 'Culture Capital' designation.

Since Niagara has recently been declared by our federal government the ‘Cultural Capital of Canada’ for 2012, with that title comes a huge responsibility for all of us; we need to not only think seriously about the future sustainability of the arts, culture and heritage in our Region, but we need to “walk the talk”.

I had the privilege of serving on the first term (2007–2010) of the Regional Culture Committee, when time was spent bringing the group together on discussion of cultural issues, the Asset Mapping of the Region, and work towards a formal Culture Plan for Niagara. This plan was approved by the Regional Council and implementation of it was declared the mandate of a new Culture Committee. Continue reading

Niagara Group Pushes Back Against Poverty In Bangladesh

A New Brief from the Niagara Volunteers for Bangladesh

Outside, it was blustery and damp. Inside, the hall was filled with warmth generated by friends, old and new, gathered together for Niagara Volunteers for Bangladesh’s eight annual fundraising dinner at the Westminster United Church in St. Catharines. On October 15, almost 350 people, from across the region and Southern Ontario, came to celebrate past successes and to continue support for projects serving impoverished women and children in Bangladesh.

Larnia Sayed entertains at recent Niagara for Bangladesh event.

The evening was filled with goodwill and great food. Everyone was treated to the graceful, traditional dances performed by Mahiya Habib, Lamia Sayed, and Jessica Amin.

Through the generosity of those attending the evening, Niagara Volunteers for Bangladesh raised more than $7,200 which will go to support the almost 300 students currently attending the Scholars’ Special School in Dhaka, the UTSA primary school in the slums of Chittagong, and schooling for the children of the ‘Tiger’ widows in the coastal region. Continue reading

Happy 75th Anniversary To CBC Radio

A brief comment from Niagara At Large publisher Doug Draper

Seventy-five years ago this November 2, switches where flipped and the first voices from public broadcasters went crackling across the Canadian airwaves from coast to coast.

CBC Radio was born as a voice all of us scattered across the expansive landscape of this country could tune in to and discover all those things that bind us together (and sometimes have us quarrelling with one another) as a country.

Through all of its 75 years, CBC has had its share of supporters and detractors. There have and will probably always be those among us who feel that the government has no business using our money to support a broadcasting network. Yet I defy anyone to deny the immeasurable role CBC Radio has played in engaging us, whether we live in Ontario, Nova Scotia, British Columbia or the Northwest Territories, in events and issues of foremost interest and concern to Canadians. Continue reading

Niagara, Ontario Councillor Calls For Moratorium On Discharging ‘Fracking’ Waste In Niagara River

By Doug Draper

A councillor for Niagara-on-the-Lake, Ontario has called on other municipalities in the region, and provincial and federal governments to demand a moratorium on flushing chemically contaminated “fracking” fluids through the Niagara Falls, NY. wastewater treatment plant to the Niagara River.

Niagara-on-the-Lake councillor Jamie King

The resolution, tabled by Niagara-on-the-Lake councillor Jamie King this October 31 and supported unanimously by the town’s council, also calls for a stop to any discharge of this waste to  the Niagara River until there is a “robust public discussion…with full consideration of the human and environmental impacts.”

If you are wondering what the resolution means, don’t feel bad because there has been a dearth of coverage in the mainstream media about this plan to discharge chemically laced water from fracking operations in to the lower great Lakes. Twenty or 30 years ago, such a scheme would have made front-page headlines in newspapers from here to Toronto. But that was then and this is now.

What is happening now is that there are plans afoot to discharge large columns of water contaminated with a cocktail of mostly unknown chemicals through the Niagara Falls, N.Y. wastewater treatment plan to the Niagara River and onward to Lake Ontario. Continue reading

A Race To Save One Of Niagara’s Oldest Churches

A Note from Sarah King Head

I’m writing to ask you to help raise some money for the restoration of historic Beaverdams Church in Thorold (c. 1832). Not only is it a gem of a building (an early example of primitive Vernacular, Greek Revival style), but its association with the father of public education in Ontario, Egerton Ryerson, gives it national (and international) significance.

The historic Beaverdams Church, one of the oldest of its kind in Canada

Indeed, Ryerson established the first free, non-denominational school in the British Empire close to the current location of the church.

Notwithstanding the reasons for the church’s current state of dilapidation, a new municipal board has been created to facilitate its restoration. But, it’s going to be expensive; and for this reason the board is exploring all possible fundraising avenues. Among these are the Aviva Community Fund. Continue reading

Let’s Not Choose The Worst Of Times

By Mark Taliano and Tori Crispo

Unions are suffering. Corporations are leaving to make profits elsewhere.  The middle class is disappearing.  Economic disparities between rich and poor are growing faster in Canada than in the United States, and banks are making a fortune. It might be described as “the best of times” (for banks) and “the worst of times” for the 99%.

Photo courtesy of Mark Taliano

The October 30 Occupy Robin Hood March, leaving St. James Park in Toronto and traveling to the Financial District for a rally, featuring speakers such as CAW Economist and author James Stanford, came up with some assessments and answers.

A reasonable assessment is that the rules are not equal and fair, and many are waking up to some uncomfortable realities.

Yes, the banks were bailed out and they paid it back, but it’s still unfair that the public sector has been burdened with insuring their risky loans, and yes, we’re talking billions of dollars. Continue reading

A Coroner’s Inquest, Critical To Niagara’s Hospital Services, Is Now Underway

By Doug Draper

Did Niagara’s paramedics do enough, and did they do it fast enough, at the scene of a car crash to save Reilly Anzovino life? And would the Fort Erie, Ontario teen still be alive today if the Niagara Health System had not closed the emergency rooms at hospitals in Fort Erie and neighbouring Port Colborne?

Denise Kennedy, Reilly Anzovino's mother at left, Reilly's father Tim Anzovino, join lawyer Wayne Redekop in front of Welland courthouse on first day of coroner's inquest. Photo by Doug Draper

That last question, in particular, is the one that has haunted Reilly Anzovino’s family and many residents in the south end of Niagara for the better part of two years.  And it is a major focus of an Ontario coroner’s inquest that got underway in a Welland courtroom this October 31.

Hopefully this inquest, ordered by the province’s chief coroner, Dr. Andrew McCallum, less than four months after Reilly’s death in the wee small hours of December 27, 2009, will get to the bottom of that question and will result in recommendations that reduce the chances that families in this region will ever have to suffer a similar tragedy. Continue reading

A Cat Named “Chance” Is Looking For A Last Chance At Life

Niagara At Large is posting the following notice for a cat in dire need of adoption from the not-for-profit group Niagara Action for Animals.

Chance is a 10-year-old, black and wWhite cat who is in immediate need of a forever home.

Chance needs a loving home

Chance was found abandoned in the country completely emaciated and starving. A Niagara Action for Animals (NAFA) member traced his tattoo and discovered that this sweet boy went missing over seven years ago, and the former guardian had absolutely no interest in his current well-being.

As if being abandoned wasn’t enough, Chance has feline diabetes which was causing his extreme emaciation, excessive thirstiness, and skin problems. Chance is currently on a diabetes treatment plan and is doing much better, however he will require ongoing medication, special food, and frequent monitoring. These conditions are difficult to fulfill in multi-cat foster homes or adoption centers, and if taken to an animal shelter, Chance would undoubtedly be euthanized. Continue reading

Have A Nice Creepy Halloween

By Doug D. Ripper (alias Doug Draper)

The pumpkin’s been carved and the werewolves are howling.

At the Howell Family Pumpkin Farm in Pelham, Ontario. Check it out this great Halloween venue before all the spooks fly away.Photo by Doug Draper

For all of the children out there, and for those of us who remain children at heart, it is time to grab those costumes down off the hangers and get ready to head out into the neighbourhoods for candy kisses and all of those other devilish, teeth-rotting treats.

Sadly, my ‘spaceman’ costume stopped fitting me when I was about 12 years old, even with a few alternations here and there. So for the past 48 years I’ve had to dig out my ski mask, hockey stick and a pillow case large enough to just about give me a double hernia when its bulging full of all candy those nice old ladies are afraid not to give when I’m standing there in all my spooky stealth, outside their front door.

I got to admit that at this stage in my life,  trick or treating at Halloween has lost a bit of its witchy magic.  Instead of getting the old; “Isn’t that a nice costume. I’m gonna give you another candy apple” that I used to get back in the olden days when I was five or six years old, I’m more often getting; “Aren’t you a little big for this?” And I’m just thinking; ‘If they only knew how old I look under that ski mask. Thank God it hides my graying hair!’

Oh well, you can’t let a little bite in the neck like that stop you from going on haunting people.

Have a nice Halloween and I hope you are not haunted by someone like me knockin’ at your door.

Niagara College Announces Largest Gift In Its History

Niagara At Large is posting the following October 28 media release from Niagara College about a major financial gift to the college from Tom Rankin, the head of St. Catharines, Ontario-based Rankin Construction.

Niagara College announced what is now the largest gift in its history
today. Tom Rankin,  CEO of Rankin Construction,  Inc. and Rankin Renewable
Power, Inc. is donating a $1-million leadership gift to Niagara
College’s Building Futures Campaign.

Tom Rankin. File photo by Doug Draper

In recognition of Mr. Rankin’s generosity and leadership, the Niagara
College’s Technology Building has been renamed “The Rankin
Technology Centre.”

“Through its Master Plan, Niagara College has transformed itself, and
greatly enhanced its ability to support industry and innovation in
Niagara, and created a sense of renewal in our community,” said
Rankin. “We’re very pleased to play a leadership role in supporting
this transformation.” Continue reading

Niagara, Ontario Regional Chair Repeats Call For Governing With ‘Respect’

A Foreword by Doug Draper

At the beginning of the October 27, 2011 regional council, the Region’s chair, Gary Burroughs, repeated a few lines from an an inaugural address he delivered to the council a year ago, asking councillors to show respect for one another, for staff, and for residents and community groups across Niagara. One cannot help but wonder why he felt the need to repeat this message and expand on it a year later, but Niagara At Large feels it is worth posting here. Perhaps other government bodies that have sometimes lost it when it comes to civil discourse, can also draw some inspiration from Gary Burroughs words, which follow.

Tonight, I want to address another issue, one that I addressed in my „election speech to Council, and one that I am firmly committed to upholding as we approach the one-year mark of this Council.  I feel it necessary and timely, to speak to that issue tonight.

Niagara, Ontario's regional chair Gary Burroughs

I want to read a few paragraphs from my inaugural speech to you during my election as Chair:
§ …“We need significant improvement in the fundamentals required for an effective Council and then take those fundamentals to bring about service excellence, value for money and innovation.

Let me start with the fundamentals. Respect.
§ Respect for the process of a Council meeting, respect for fellow Councillors, for staff as well as residents, community groups and taxpayers, and we need every councillor to have the opportunity to participate fully in the decisions and direction of this Council and this government. Continue reading

Mobile Dental Clinic Hitting The Road In Niagara

By Doug Draper

Niagara, Ontario’s regional government is putting a vehicle on the road aimed at providing dental care to children and youth in need.

Niagara's Mobile Dental Clinic riding your way. Photo by Doug Draper

Niagara’s Mobile Dental Clinic, paid for through the provincial government’s ‘Healthy Smiles Ontario’ program, will now begin traveling to Niagara schools and community agencies throughout the region. This mobile clinic is now one of five of its kind across Ontario receiving funding from the province.

The 33-foot Winnebabo houses a fully-equipped dental clinic, staffec by a registered dental hygienist and certified dental assistant. It ill provide free preventative dental care to children and youth up to their 18th birthday.

Niagara regional chair Gary Burroughs, St. Catharines MPP Jim Bradley and Dr. Valerie Jaeger, the region’s medical officer of health, where among those there at a ceremony this October 27 for the launch of this program.

“Good, strong teeth do a lot for us,” said Jaeger during the launch. “ Since there is no fluoride in the water in Niagara, it is doubly important to have a check-up and follow dental advice carefully. The mobile clinic will make it that much easier. … Essentially we are bringing the clinic to the client.”

If you wish to know more about this new service or how to access it for a child or youth, call 905 688-8248 or (toll free) 1 888 505-6074, ext. 7399. You can also access Niagara Region’s website at www.niagararegion.ca and follow the links.

Another Final Ode To Autumn In Pictures

Niagara At Large is pleased to feature some of the fine photo images captured by residents in our region – these by Dan Wilson.

“Spades take up leaves
No better than spoons,
And bags full of leaves
Are light as balloons.

I make a great noise
Of rustling all day
Like rabbit and deer
Running away.”

From Robert Frost’s poem, Gathering Leaves

The last of those rustling leaves are gathering on the ground all around us and in the wind – running away – as the first frost kills off what are left of the geraniums and snow gets ready to fall.

A trail along Ball's Falls. Photo by Dan Wilson.

The greater Niagara region has plenty of colourful beauty to show off in the Fall, from the trees that grace the Delaware Park area in Buffalo, New York to those that feature an equally beautiful tapestry of colours in the Effingham and Short Hills areas of Niagara, Ontario and beyond. Dan Wilson, a friend and supporter of Niagara At Large, who has contributed his thoughtful prose and his fine photography to this site on a number of occasions in the past, has done it again with some very nice  parting shots of Autumn. Continue reading

Niagara Should Follow Toronto’s Lead With A Shark Fin Ban

A Commentary by Doug Draper

Well good for the majority of those sitting on the City of Toronto’s council, and good for one of the oldest and most exploited creatures on this planet – the shark.

A shark writhing in pain after having its fins chopped off, before being tossed back in the ocean alive.

This October 25, following many hours of debate, all but a few members of that council, including the mayor, Rob Ford, voted in favour of a ban aimed at closing Toronto’s doors to shark fins, traditionally used by members of the Chinese community in soup, by September of next year.

The Toronto council, given the size of its Chinese community and the fact that it has been the largest single market for shark fins in Canada, deserves high marks for courage in taking this stance. It has placed an opportunity to do its part to prevent the final extinction of another life-form on this planet against a gruesome activity that involves sawing off the fines of live sharks then throwing the bleeding creature back in the ocean to certain death. Continue reading

Niagara’s Cindy Forster Named NDP’s Deputy House Leader

A Niagara At Large News Brief

Cindy Forster, recently elected MPP in the riding of Welland, Ontario, will serve as deputy house leader and the municipal affairs and housing critic in the provincial NDP’s new “shadow cabinet.”

“Cindy brings years of experience in municipal and regional politics to the role of Municipal Affairs and Housing Critic” said Ontario NDP leader Andrea Horwath in a statement released following Forster’s appointment to the positions. Continue reading

Saying Goodbye To Our Spectacular Fall Colours

A Brief Note from Doug Draper

I have so many friends who say that their favourite season of the year is Fall.

A fine Fall photo by Niagara resident Paul Kassay

There are days that are still warm enough to do outdoor things and, of course, there are those spectacular Fall colours. No doubt about it, a ride through Effingham in Niagara, Ontario or a walk through Buffalo, New York’s Delaware Park can be beautiful when the sun is sparkling through the red and yellow of changing leaves on a nice October day. Continue reading

‘Occupy Movement’ Gains Traction As It Speaks To Grievances In Niagara And Elsewhere

By Mark Taliano and Tori Crispo

“You Gotta Go To Know.”

New York Times reporter Thomas Freidman’s truism has been resonating recently. One would think that with the rain and cold, the Occupy Toronto movement might have lost its momentum.  Not so. On October 15, the first day of the protest, there were 60 tents at St. James Park.  One week later, there were 180.   “You gotta go to know” though, because this wasn’t in the corporate papers.

One of many signs from the Occupy movement at the Toronto camp

The park has transformed itself from a rag-tag assemblage of hastily assembled tents to a vibrant community with a library, legal center, medical center, music center, sign-manufacturing area, garden areas, and on and on.  Even more impressive, it is inhabited by a group of democratically-oriented, peaceful, and goal-directed people. You won’t find apathy here, but you will find plenty of interesting ideas.

Hira, a young “occupier” offered that everyone in the community, though different, (like the five fingers of a hand), is a Leader.  It’s a refreshing notion, especially compared to the world outside the park, where it’s sometimes difficult to know who’s really “pulling the strings”.  Continue reading

Candles Of Hope Still Flicker For Occupy Movement

A Brief Commentary by Doug Draper

The 92-year-old folk singer icon Pete Seeger traveled down the Hudson River Valley with his folk-singing friend Arlo Guthrie this October 21 to lend support to the ongoing ‘Occupy Movement’ for the 99 per cent that got its start, more than a month ago, at ground zero in New York City.

Folk legend Peter Seeger (middle) joins protesters at Occupy movement gathering in New York City this October 21.

On a chilly Friday evening,  Seeger, long known for his support for social justice and peace (so much so that he was blacklisted by the right-wing equivalents of Sarah Palin in the 1950s), and his busy Arlo sang songs with hundreds of others around Columbus Circle in New York City in support of countless hundreds of thousands of others in the U.S., Canada and other nations around the world who are getting sick and tired of watching their opportunity for a good life melt down while a few greedy people gamble with stock paper and hedge funds at their expense. These people on the stock floors on Wall Street and Bay Street behave like hogs in a pit who, as filthy as they are in a more figurative sort of way, look like they’ve never had any honest dirt on their hands in the sense that they’ve ever produced a toaster or anything else of any real value.  They don’t deal in a real economy that is about working at a  job producing things that people need. They trade in bogus bonds and other paper garbage that have contributed to the most catastrophic economic downturn on this continent since the Great Depression of the 1930s.

All that this swine has done is shove on the rest of us the worst face of capitalism and left ticker tape equivalent  of toilet paper on the stockroom floors with their feces on it.

So there was good old Peter Seeger and his friend Arlo Guthrie out there with some of the Occupy movement people camping still braving the colder air descending on their rallies. They led the gathering in a few choruses of ‘We Shall Overcome’. For the sake of a middle class on this continent that is being dismembered by the hogs on Wall and Bay Streets, let’s damn well hope we do overcome.

(Share your views below. Please try to stay at least as civil as the author of this post was in your comments. On this particular topic, I know it’s hard.)

Here’s Your Chance To Talk Taxes With Niagara’s Regional Government

A Note from Niagara At Large publisher Doug Draper

I’ve often said that if I had a dollar for every time I heard someone complaining about their property taxes on the Ontario side of our greater Niagara region, I’d be able to cover the cost of my tax bills for the rest of my life.

We do a lot of complaining, alright, about annual hike in our property taxes and about all of the things we think our councillors are wasting our money on, but here is what gets me as a veteran reporter of municipal budgets in Niagara. Come time for our regional councillors to debate the annual budget, hardly anyone from the public bothers to show up at the meetings, let alone get on any list of speakers to speak out on behalf of themselves and their fellow citizens.

Members of the Niagara Regional Police Board are usually there to defend their often way-out-of-whack-with-our-ability-to-pay budget hikes. There are also the department heads of departments and the odd representative of one of the unions representing workers at the regional government who attend the budget meetings and who sometimes offer the council a few words around their interests. But you rarely saw any more than two or three members of the general public attending for the purposes of saying a few words on behalf of that common taxpayer. That has been so even though about half of every dollar you pay out of your property taxes go to regional services. The rest goes to your local municipalities and to education.

It’s not like Niagara’s regional government has gone out of its way to discourage ordinary citizens from participating in its budget process. In recent years, it has tried harder to engage the interest of ordinary citizens and this year it is doing it with what it is calling pre-budget consultation sessions this coming October 26 and November 2 in halls in the municipalities of Lincoln and Fort Erie for residents across the northern and southern tiers of the region.

You can let Niagara Regional Chair Gary Burroughs, who will be hosting this meeting along with other regional representatives, that you are concerned about how your property tax dollars are spent by showing up at these meetings and offering your input. Or practically no one will show up at these meetings which may send our municipal leaders another message that is probably not so good in terms of our level of interest in how our taxdollars are spent.

What follows is the media release for these budget consultation meetings, circulated this October 21 by Niagara’s regional government.

 Understanding Regional services and what they cost:
2012 pre-budget consultation

NIAGARA REGION, Oct.21, 2011 – In an ongoing effort to increase public awareness of Regional programs and services and the Regional budget process, pre-budget consultation sessions will be held on Oct. 26, 2011 at Lincoln Town Hall and on Nov. 2, 2011 at Fort Erie Town Hall. These sessions will also be webcast live at www.niagararegion.ca, giving residents an opportunity to participate online.

Niagara regional chair Gary Burroughs will host public consultation meetings on budget.

In addition, a water, wastewater and waste management information open house will be held Oct. 24, 2011 at Regional Headquarters in Thorold.
The budget sessions will be hosted by Regional Chair Gary Burroughs; Regional Councillor Dave Augustyn, Chair of the Budget Review Committee of the Whole; and Mike Trojan, Chief Administrative Officer. Brian Hutchings, Commissioner of Corporate Services and Treasurer for Niagara Region, will brief residents on the 2012 budget and the programs and services that are funded by that budget. Residents will have the opportunity to give input and feedback directly to Councillors and Regional staff who are there to listen and answer questions.
Residents are invited to make a short five to 10 minute presentation, at the budget consultation sessions based on information available on the Region’s website, and in response to the following questions:

1) What are the top five funding priorities you feel that Regional Council should address in the 2012 budget?
2) How would you direct those funds?

To register as a delegation, visit the Region’s website at www.niagararegion.ca .
Questions will also be taken online at www.niagararegion.ca or through Facebook (www.facebook.com/niagararegion) and twitter (www.twitter.com/niagararegion). Both sessions will be broadcast live on the Region’s website, allowing residents to participate even if they can’t make it out in person to the meeting.
“About 49 per cent of residents’ property taxes are going to fund programs and
services delivered by Niagara Region. What does that mean for Niagara residents? In 2012, on an average home valued at $220,000, residents would pay around $1,534, which is a significant amount of money,” said Regional Chair Gary Burroughs. “That’s why taxpayer affordability is Council’s number one priority. At the same time we need to be fiscally responsible by ensuring we maintain a sustainable budget that will meet the needs of today, without compromising our future needs.”
-more-Join the conversation and interact with the Niagara Region in real time on Facebook, Twitter and YouTube MR2011-CFS-134
”These forums are opportunities for residents to learn about the services we provide
and their value,” said Regional Councillor Dave Augustyn, Chair of the Budget Review
Committee of the Whole. “We want to hear from residents about Council’s priorities and the 2012 budget, so we’re providing less formal opportunities for residents to hear about, comment on and ask questions about our next budget. Residents can still participate at regularly scheduled budget Council meetings taking place in November and we hope to have strong participation at these meetings,” concludes Augustyn.

A report summarizing the public feedback will be prepared for Committee and Regional Council.

(We encourage our Niagara At Large readers to share your views on this post below.)

Welland’s MPP Slams Ontario Government For Costly Transfer Of Patients’ Health Files

Niagara At Large is posting the following October 18 open letter from the newly elected MPP for the Welland Riding, NDP Cindy Forster, to the Liberal government’s health mnister, Deb Matthews. It speaks to the escalating health costs residents in this region and others in Ontario around transferring their information from one doctor to another.

To Ontario Health Minister Deb Matthews

“Since a new government cabinet is not being sworn in until October 20thand the urgency of this matter, I am sending this letter to your attention as current health minister regarding some 1,800 patients now in limbo regarding their health care.

Welland, Ontario Riding MPP Cindy Forster calls for action on costly transfers of patients' health files.

Dr. Vinod Shaw ended his practice at the end of September here in Welland and arrangements made to transfer files to Dr. Muftah Belgasem to the Carlton Medical Clinic in north St. Catharines, some forty kilometers from Welland. However due to a family emergency as indicated on his phone service, files are now in the hands of his colleague Dr. Mathura Ravindram. He has indicated that between 1,600 and 1,800 patient files arrived yesterday and he now has to sort through them.

Bob Fralick of Welland is 80 years old and he’s now looking for another doctor along with his wife Mary and called my office when told it would cost nearly $40.00 for the first five pages of his patient record and $1.55 for each page after that. He is understandably outraged. Continue reading

A Message From Hudak To Ontario Premier – Fix Niagara’s Hospital Mess Today!

A Foreword by Niagara At Large publisher Doug Draper

Ontario Conservative leader Tim Hudak wrote the following open letter to the province’s premier, Dalton McGuinty, in the wake of a deplorable incident earlier this October where 82-year-old Doreen Walker, who was visiting her dying husband at the Niagara Health System’s Niagara Falls hospital site, was left without help on the lobby floor for a reported 28 with a broken limb before she received help.

Ontario PC leader Tim Hudak speaks in front of Niagara's Fort Erie Hospital in 2010 following closing of its emergency room. File photo

Before Niagara At Large posts Hudak’s letter, we want to point out that accounts of this incident in the media have given at least some people the impression that it took an ambulance attached to the Niagara regional government’s EMS services, and not to the NHS, 28 minutes to arrive at the scene after someone inside the hospital was told that 911 had to be called to help Wallace. John Sherwin, a spokesperson for EMS told NAL records showed that the ambulance arrived at the scene in seven minutes and 24 seconds after the 911 call was made. That may mean that there was some delay in making the call.

It is, in NAL’s view, a shame that Niagara Region’s EMS – an emergency response unit with an excellent reputation across the province and country – sometimes finds itself getting gummed up in delay times and other incidents that are more of the NHS’s making. And that doesn’t begin to account for the extra costs municipal taxpayers across Niagara are paying for our ambulance services due to the apparent willingness of the NHS to use our ambulances as mini-hospitals as they close emergency rooms and beds at hospital sites across the region.

Hudak’s letter to the premier follows in the wake of earlier expressions of upset over the Doreen Wallace incident and coverage on it that made national headlines. Here is Hudak’s letter to McGuinty.

October 20, 2011

Dear Mr. McGuinty,

I am writing in regards to a series of troubling, and quite frankly disgraceful, events that require your immediate attention and intervention.

I refer to recent news that a senior, Doreen Wallace, was denied emergency care after falling and breaking her hip near the entrance of the Greater Niagara General Hospital (GNGH) while on her way to visit her dying husband. Continue reading

Jim Bradley Returns To Portfolio He Loved Best

A Commentary by Doug Draper

He’s  back in the environmental saddle again.

Jim Bradley, the veteran St. Catharines MPP – now the longest serving member in the Ontario legislature – is going to be the minister of environment for this province once again, and that may be some cause for celebration.

The reason I say it maybe is that Jim Bradley first served as Ontario’s environment minister in 1985 through 1990, when his Liberals formed the government, first during a two-year coalition with then Bob Rae’s NDP, and for three more years with a majority Liberal government, led by then premier David Peterson, for another three years.

Through that time, Jim Bradley remained arguably the best environment minister this province has ever had. Certainly, the famed environmentalist and host of the Nature of Things, David Suzuki, has said that over and over again. I have hardly ever heard Suzuki speak to a group in this province over the past few decades – and I’ve heard him speak a number of times and over the borders in New York and Michigan – without pointing out that Bradley was, in his view, the best environment minister Ontario has ever had. Continue reading

“We’re In Frigging Ontario!” – The Province’s Tim Hudak On The Blatant Lack Of Hospital Care For A Niagara Senior

A Commentary by Doug Draper

Further to the commentary I posted on this site this October 19, involving the reprehensible lack of care for 82-year Doreen Wallace – who fell and writhed in pain on a grate on Niagara Falls, Ontario hospital property before a few at that site finally showed some humanity and helped her -I want to share with you an audio version of a press scrum with Tim Hudak.

Ontario Conservative leader Tim Hudak

You can click on a link to hear Ontario Conservative leader Tim Hudak’s words at the end of this post.

I quoted Tim Hudak in the October 19 piece on this, but it is worth listening to him on tape because a genuine upset and anger come through from this politician who, at the end of the day, is a Niagara resident who also comes across like he is getting the mess the Niagara Health System’s so-called ‘Hospital Improvement Plan’ – more infamously known as the HIP – is causing here in terms of lost services and soaring wait times at what emergency rooms we have left. Continue reading

The Niagara Health System Is In Alice’s Wonderland. It’s In The ‘Frigging’ Twilight Zone

A Commentary by Doug Draper

The St. Catharines radio station CKTB ran a headline on its online site this October 19 that runs like one of those headlines Jay Leno or David Letterman would make fun of on their late night shows.

Doreen Wallace - another victim of Niagara Health System mismanagement. How many more!

Except there is absolutely nothing funny about this one which reads as follow – ‘CKTB EXCLUSIVE: NHS memo demands all staff help people in distress on hospital property’

Isn’t that nice?The Niagara Health System – a body responsible for operating most of the hospital services in Niagara, Ontario and responsible for spending hundreds of millions of our tax dollars a year – is going to finally demand that its staff help people in distress on hospital property. Shouldn’t that be a given?

Apparently not. Just go ask 82-year-old Doreen Wallace, who went to the Niagara Health System hospital site in Niagara Falls, Ontario earlier this October to visit a loved one, and who slipped and broke a limb on the hospital property. She might just as well have entered the Twilight Zone or tripped through Alice in Wonderland’s “looking glass” than found herself in distress at one of the Niagara Health System’s hospital sites.

Sprawled out and laying in pain as she was on a grate on the hospital property for some 30 minutes before she got help, some of the morons at the Niagara Falls hospital site, now being supervised by Dr. Kevin Smith (the provincial Liberal government’s handpicked patsy for guiding along hospital systems in trouble) apparently insisted that the only thing to do was to call 911.

Call 911? For what? An ambulance? She was already at a hospital, for God sake! What does someone who has sworn any kind of oath to help people in distress have to do to intervene on behalf of an elderly person on hospital property? But never mind codes of ethics when it comes to looking after patients at the NHS. This is not the first time someone has been left waiting for an ambulance on hospital property.

Earlier this year there was the case of a city councillor for Niagara Falls was in distress in the same hospital’s parking lot. That outrageous incident received quite a bit of publicity, but some idiots never learn. At the NHS, the rule seems to be, even under the supervision of this new guy Smith, if someone is in distress on hospital property, call 911 for an ambulance, and maybe it will show up on time.

But overall, this is bloody nuts and the province’s Conservative leader Tim Hudak said it right when he learned of the incident.
“We’re in frigging Ontario,” said Hudak to reporters this October 19. “This is the way we’re going to treat a senior citizen? That’s wrong. They have to clean up that mess at the Niagara Health System and we’ll make sure they do.”

“What makes me particularly upset as a Niagara member is that this keeps happening over and over again, with the Niagara Health System,” Hudak said. “That thing needs an overhaul from top to bottom, to stand up for patients. It is absolutely outrageous that in 2011 in the province of Ontario that a senior citizen could be treated in that way.”

Hudak’s right, and it’s too bad he wasn’t as passionate as that during the election. The NHS sure does need an overhaul. And it needs to be fully investigated by the province’s Ombudsman, Andre Marin, right now!

(Niagara At Large invites you to share your views on this post below.)

A Dispatch From A Commemorative Ride To Reforest Southern Ontario

By John Bacher

In early October of 1905, the newly appointed university lecturer John Edmund Zavitz cycled 160 kilometres from the Ontario Agricultural College Campus in Guelph to the farm of E. C. Drury, at Crown Hill, north of Barrie. My wife Mary Lou and I resolved to commemorate Zavitz’s dramatic ride, to draw attention to the need to finish his task of planting a billion trees on lands not already forested in Southern Ontario.

John Bacher and wife Mary Lou pose in front of a plaque for Edmund Zavitz as they retrace his historic 1905 ride through southern Ontario.

When Zavitz cycled to Crown Hill’s Height, along York Road, ( Highway 7) and then Young Street, he must have sped along with a fast and powerful beat. It would have been quite appropriate given the seriousness of the situation that Ontario was facing if he shouted loudly that; “The deserts are coming”, since they were threatening to bury the province in sand. About a fifth of the province’s arable land had already been degraded in this manner and the situation was getting worse.

In addition to spreading deserts the Southern Ontario was facing massive floods from deforestation. A few years after Zavitz’s alarm call the OAC campus in Guelph itself was cut off from the world for a day by a flood. It caused the loss of hundreds of homes and people to be rescued in boats.  In  1929 Guelph only narrowly escaped catastrophe after a third dam barely held following the destruction of two upstream. While the city was saved factories experienced massive damages. Continue reading

To Hell With Global. Kill Wall And Bay Street. Buy Local!

A Commentary by Doug Draper

The movement that has come to be known as ‘Occupy Wall Street’ came to our doorstep in recent days.

As thousands continued to gather under that Occupy Wall Street banner in the streets and parks of Lower Manhattan in a call for justice for middle and working class people across this continent who’ve seen their livelihoods tattered, many others have joined them in cities around the world, including Toronto and right here in the greater Niagara area in Buffalo, New York.

Some three thousand people gathered in Toronto this past Saturday, October 15 and hundreds more rallied in Buffalo’s Niagara Square, outside of the grand city hall there for a fairer shake for all of the rest of us from a handful of corporate money lenders, hedge fund operators and their like who are doing little or nothing to contribute to fabric of your communities or the quality of our lives except to suck them dry for their own personal gain. Continue reading

Something’s Happening Here …Reflections On ‘Occupy Toronto’, Oct. 15, 2011

By Fiona McMurran

After parking the car in downtown Toronto on Saturday morning, Timothy Healey and I walked along Adelaide Street,  looking for the Occupy Toronto gathering. Everyone else on the street – individuals and little groups of two or three – seemed to be heading in the same direction.  Most weren’t identifiable as “activists”.  They were just ordinary people of all shapes and sizes – old, young, students, a few folks in suits, parents with small kids in tow – looking to get involved.

Niagara's Fiona McMurran telling it like it is at the 'Occupy Toronto' railly. Photo by Saleh Waziruddin.

We found the group — a surprisingly large one — at the corner of Bay and King, in the heart of the banking district. It was 10:30 a.m., and people were arriving all the time, just like us.

Nobody seemed to know what was going on, but that didn’t appear to matter. The atmosphere was expectant, but also relaxed, even jovial. Despite the size of the crowd, it was surprisingly easy to move around, looking for – and connecting with — people we knew. There was no pushing or jostling; people just moved aside, as if the crowd were some kind of liquid, fluid and adaptable.

There didn’t appear to be any specific leader, or obvious agenda. Instead, various facilitators, who had been part of the earlier General Assemblies planning this Oct. 15 Occupy Toronto rally and the on-going occupation, took turns explaining how the day was going to proceed.  When they had something to communicate, these facilitators would call out “mike check”; those words were echoed by people surrounding the speaker. The call would then be echoed to those further out, and so on until it reached those on the fringes. Everyone quieted down to hear the following messages, which were relayed in short phrases using this group communication process called the “people’s mike”. The technique is borrowed from Occupy Wall Street. To use electronic amplification on the streets of New York City, you need a permit, so the “people’s mike” became an alternative means of passing messages. Continue reading

Democracy Lives In The Heart Of ‘Occupy Toronto’

By Mark Taliano and Tori Crispo

Every once in a while, real democracy breaks out.  It was conspicuously absent during the most recent provincial election, but it raised its head on Saturday, October 15, for the debut of “Occupy Toronto.”

Even dogs came out against fat cats on Bay Street in Toronto. Photo courtesy of Mark Taliano and Tori Crispo

Three thousand protesters from every demographic peacefully assembled at King and Bay Streets in the middle of the towering financial district, and then marched along Jarvis Street to St. James Park, where some will be camping into the month of December.

Some might suggest that there is no clear leadership, and no clear message.  But the message lies in the well-researched signs, and the leadership is horizontal, rather than hierarchical.  Everyone has an equal voice. Continue reading

A Message To Ontario’s Liberals From Welland’s New NDP Rep – ‘Let’s Get To Work’

(Niagara At Large is posting the following message from newly elected Welland MPP Cindy Forster for our readers information.)

Newly-elected Welland MPP Cindy Forster is calling on the Liberal Leader Dalton McGuinty to sit down with other parties to set a date to convene the first session of Legislative business in the House, and also key Legislative committees like Finance.

Welland Riding MPP Cindy Forster ready to go to work at Queen's Park

Forster, who is in Queens Park today for her first meeting as a member of Andrea Horwath’s expanded NDP caucus, said the provincial government should immediately tackle issues like job creation, health care, and making life more affordable.

“Andrea Horwath and our NDP caucus are already at work, proposing solutions that work for people,” she said. “It’s time for MPPs from all the parties to get together, make this minority government work, and address the needs of Ontario.”

Forster said the voters sent a clear message to Queens Park that they want a different kind of politics. Continue reading

A Niagara Marathon Run To Raise Money To Fight Huntington’s Disease

By Doug Draper

It became infamous for stealing the life of one of America’s most legendary writers of folk music.

This marathon run is for Vicki

Huntington’s disease or Huntington’s Chorea as it was once known, was virtually unknown to the public at large until it struck down Woody Guthrie, who wrote such folk anthems as ‘This Land is Your Land., ‘Pastures of Plenty’ and ‘Deportee’. This debilitating neurologically and still fatal disease may still seem remote to many people, yet it can strike close to home.

This past summer, it claimed the life of Vicki Paone, a Niagara Falls woman in her 30s whose family has been campaigning for years to raise money for better treatment and a cure for this debilitating, neurological disease. Continue reading

Brock Sociologist To Speak On Educational Inequalities In Our Schools

(Niagara At Large is posting the following media release from the St. Catharines & District Council of Women for your information.)

‘Educational Inequalities in our Schools and Community-based Solutions to Narrowing the Achievement Gap’ will be the subject of a free public meeting on Thursday October 13th at 8 p.m. at the St. Catharines Centennial Library 54 Church Street.

Brock sociologist Kevin Gosine

According to guest speaker Kevin Gosine , a Brock University sociologist, there is “a persistent academic achievement gap among Ontario high school students”, and while every student should get an equal opportunity for a good education, ” there are institutional processes within our schools that work to perpetuate educational inequalities based on class and race.”

Mr. Gosine, who grew up in regent Park in Toronto, worked as a researcher at the first Pathways to Education program in that area and continues to do research for Pathways Canada , knows how well this community-based educational support program works for students and why it has been so successful in Regent Park and has been replicated in 10 other communities across Canada. Continue reading

Former Toronto Mayor John Sewell To Speak In Niagara On Policing In Canada

A Note for Niagara At Large readers

The Niagara branch of Amnesty International is hosting former Toronto mayor John Sewell for an address he will deliver in Niagara-on-the-Lake, Ontario this Wednesday, October 12 on  the topic of ‘How We Are Policed In Canada’.

Former Toronto mayor John Sewell

Sewell, a long-time advocate for better public transit, more sustainable urban growth and other social justice causes, has also not been afraid to say, as a former mayor of the largest city in Canada, how he feels about the conduct of police forces at last year’s G20 summit and related issues. Continue reading

NHS Honchos Flunk Ethics 101

A Commentary by Doug Draper

You’d think that some people in the six-figure salary range would have been able to pay their own way to those 2010 Vancouver Winter Olympics games, wouldn’t you?

Former CEO Debbie Sevenpifer made it to the Vancouver Olympics

Well, apparently not.

According to a September 28 letter Dr. Kevin Smith, the recent provincially appointed supervisor of a Niagara Health System already drowning in a sea of controversy and public mistrust, sent to Andy Petrowski, a Niagara regional councillor for St. Catharines, he has “determined that two members of the NHS Senior Team did travel to the 2010 Winter Olympics, paid for by third parties.”

The letter was sent to Petrowski in response to concerns he raised to the supervisor about “rumours” that some members of an NHS responsible for managing the majority of the hospital services in this region may have taken something in the form of gifts from private parties that do business with the NHS. And to quote key passages from it, Smith went on to say that “the first individual was Ms. Debbie Sevenpifer, Chief Executive
Officer of Niagara Health System. Ms. Sevenpifer traveled to the Olympics, paid for by RICOH. RICOH does have a contract with NHS for photocopiers. This contract was in place before the Olympics. Ms. Sevenpifer is no longer an employee of the NHS.” Continue reading